When OneDrive crashes it forces me to:
1) Reboot (WHY???)
2) sign in into my MS account while I am aready signed into it in Windows 10. I use it to log into my PC! Why sign in again?
3) Chose where to store files. I already have 200 Gb of OneDrive files on my PC in non default location. How hard can it be to memorize it and don't force me to pick it again?

OneDrive for Business should have its own area in the admin center in Office365.

We have a scenario where we want to deploy OneDrive for Business to all employees and it will be the main place for storing and sharing documents within the organization. Today, there are very few options for IT admins to administer OneDrive for Business users. There is for example no easy way for us to find out who in the organization who acctualy use OneDrive for Business. We would like an admin panel within Office365 Admin which atleast has these missing tools:

- Generate reports on which users has synced their OneDrive for Business and to which computers
- How much storage each user is using
- An overview of which users currently have any sync errors

There should also be some options to migrate data from a users OneDrive for Business, for example when an employee leaves the company.

OneDrive for Business should have its own area in the admin center in Office365.

We have a scenario where we want to deploy OneDrive for Business to all employees and it will be the main place for storing and sharing documents within the organization. Today, there are very few options for IT admins to administer OneDrive for Business users. There is for example no easy way for us to find out who in the organization who acctualy use OneDrive for Business. We would like an admin panel within Office365 Admin which atleast has these missing tools:

Thanks to the new sync client, selective sync filtered by folder is available. However we see an increasing demand from end-users (especially in enterprise) that folder sync might not be enough to satisfy their needs to sync/filters files by other options: specific time period.

Example, a user might still want to sync all the working folders but only the most recent 1 year of the files. While the older files is still visible in the local drive as thumbnails representing a web link (link to cloud) but the copy of the file is not synced to local for saving disk space.

Thanks to the new sync client, selective sync filtered by folder is available. However we see an increasing demand from end-users (especially in enterprise) that folder sync might not be enough to satisfy their needs to sync/filters files by other options: specific time period.

Example, a user might still want to sync all the working folders but only the most recent 1 year of the files. While the older files is still visible in the local drive as thumbnails representing a web link (link to cloud) but the copy of the file is not synced to local for saving disk…